The Asian Age

Markets stumped; Sensex dips 792 pts

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Mumbai, Oct. 5: Equity markets racked up heavy losses for the third straight session Friday after the RBI unexpected­ly maintained status quo on rates but changed its stance to “calibrated tightening” amid the rupee breaching the 74mark.

The Sensex plunged 792.17 points to end at a near six- month low of 34,376.99, while the broader NSE Nifty dropped 282.80 points to 10,316.45.

This was the fifth straight weekly loss for the benchmarks. The Sensex declined by a massive 1,850.15 points or 5.10 per cent, and the Nifty lost 614 points or 5.50 per cent, this week.

The RBI on Friday unexpected­ly maintained status quo on the benchmark interest rate but warned that rising oil prices and tightening of global financial conditions pose substantia­l risks to growth and inflation.

Reserve Bank changed its policy stance to ‘ calibrated tightening’ from ‘ neutral’, while affirming its commitment to achieve the medium- term objectives to contain price rise.

Marketmen were expecting the Monetary Policy Committee to go for at least a 0.25 per cent hike at the review.

Meanwhile, the rupee crashed below the 74- level against the US dollar for the first time ever.

The domestic currency was quoting 65 paise lower at 74.23 ( intra- day) against the dollar soon after the RBI announced its monetary policy.

The 30- share index remained in the negative zone through the session. Selling activity gathered momentum after the RBI's policy decision, which dragged the index to a low of 34,202.22. It finally finished 792.17 points, or 2.25 per cent down at 34,376.99.

This is its lowest closing since April 23, when it had finished at 34,450.77 points.

The Nifty too tanked 282.80 points, or 2.67 per cent to close at 10,316.45 points. Intra- day, it hit a low of 10,261.90 soon after policy announceme­nt.

“Status quo policy was quite surprising while under shooting inflation and recent fuel tax cut may give some leeway to the cautious sentiment.

“However, rupee weakened further and market dived to lower lows as risk of fiscal deficit and rise in US bond yield still impacting the outflow of foreign money,” said Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services.

Meanwhile, FPIs sold shares worth ` 2,760.63 crore on Thursday, while DIIs bought equities to the tune of ` 1,823.59 crore, as per provisiona­l data.

ONGC was the top loser in the Sensex pack, tumbling 15.93 per cent, followed by RIL 6.31 per cent.

Other major losers were Adani Ports 5.36 per cent, SBI 4.73 per cent, Bharti Airtel 4.27 per cent, Maruti Suzuki 4.18 per cent, Yes Bank 4.16 per cent, Bajaj Auto 3.97 per cent, ITC Ltd 3.52 per cent, Vedanta Ltd 3.42 per cent, M& M 3.35 per cent, HDFC 3.24 per cent and Axis Bank 3.01 per cent.

Bucking the trend, Infosys emerged as the top gainer by spurting 2.19 per cent, while TCS rose 1.88 per cent.

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